Registration is set to begin at 2 p.m. Friday, Sept. 19 in the Mitchell College of Business 2nd Floor lobby. Presentations begin at 2:30. All Presentation will be held in the Striplin Auditoriums on the 2nd floor of the Mitchell College of Business.
Student Sessions are Concurrent. Featured Sessions are Plenary.
Friday, Sept. 19
Student Session I 2:30-3:05
Chelsea Ruxer (U. of Evansville) Falsity in Physicalism
Raquel Spencer (West Virginia U.) Of Death and Experience
Student Session II 3:10-3:45
Wes Anderson (Portland State U.) Reciprocal Containment Naturalism and Extreme Methodological Naturalism
Jonathan Langlinais (Loyola U. - New Orleans) Hegel's Concept of Virtue as Ethical Phronesis
Student Session III 3:50-4:25
Melissa Garland (Spring Hill College) The Price of Escaping the Vat
John Silvia IV (U. of Southern Mississippi) An Aristotelian Internet, Or to E-mail or not to E-mail
Student Session IV 4:30-5:05
Lamont Rodgers (Tulane U.) The Other Kind of Deliberate Action
Jonathan Baynham (Spring Hill College) Using Common Sense
Featured Session I 5:10-5:55
Jamie Watson (Florida State University) Philosophical Intuitions and Psychological Envy
Featured Session II 6:00-6:45
Brandon N. Towl (Washington U. in St. Louis) Laws and Constrained Kinds: A Lesson from Motor Neuroscience
Saturday, Sept. 20 (Registration and Coffee begins at 8 a.m.)
Featured Session III 9:00-9:45
Josh May (U. of California - Santa Barbara) Empirical Evidence Against Psychological Egoism
Featured Session IV 9:50-10:35
Christopher Freiman (U. of Arizona) Deontological Emotions and Consequentialism
Featured Session V 10:40 - 11:25
Wesley Buckwalter (SUNY at Buffalo) Knowledge Isn’t Closed on Saturdays
Featured Session VI 11:30-12:15
Mark Phelan (U. of North Carolina) Evidence that Stakes Don’t Matter to Evidence
Lunch 12:15-1:45
Keynote Address 1:45 - 3:15
Joshua Knobe (U. of North Carolina) The Pervasive Impact of Moral Judgment
Featured Session VII 3:20-4:05
Justin M. Sytsma (U. of Pittsburgh) The Proper Province of Philosophy: Ordinary Language Meets Experimental Philosophy
Featured Session VIII 4:10-4:55
Adam Arico (U. of Arizona) The Folk v. Acme Corp: Or, the Effect of Context on Judgments of Consciousness Attributions
Featured Session IX 5:00-5:45
Edward T. Cokely (Max Planck Institute for Human Development) & Adam Feltz (Schreiner U.) Individual Differences and the Truth of Right and Wrong: Predicting Variations in Moral Judgment
Featured Session X 5:50-6:35
Matthew Katz (Central Michigan University) Can Developmental Psychology Reveal That Arithmetic is Known A Priori?
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
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